May 17, 2012
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A Family Affair

When the fall semester begins this August at Oakland City University, the school’s president Ray Barber will face new challenges, but what he’s already overcome has readied him for the future
Ray and Beth BarberRay and Beth Barber
Ray and Beth Barber have a strong commitment to Oakland City University.

Curled up next to his grandmother, 4-year-old Brody couldn’t resist: “Mimi, your hair’s not looking good,” he said, referring to her bald head. “I asked Jesus to make you better. Are you better?” It was the kind of innocent honesty that Beth Barber cherished, and she needed the pick-me-up.

In 2008, Beth was diagnosed with breast cancer, just a month after her husband Ray Barber was inaugurated as Oakland City University’s president. You’re celebrating one minute, she says, and then a regular check-up reveals you have cancer the next. “It’s almost like our bubble had burst,” she says.

That bubble had burst in many ways. Barber became president at a time when the stock market had dropped. During an economic crisis, he was tasked with raising $1.6 million to complete the Tichenor Center that was under construction, and Barber also needed to keep the university funds steady enough to avoid salary decreases and layoffs. His actions were proof he would be a positive leader, improve campus life, and foster community ties — even when his wife needed him most.

Just a year ago, Barber led the university (just north of Evansville) in implementing a new vision, mission statement, and strategic plan that echoed the motto, “Enter to Learn, Go Forth to Serve.” In this plan, he developed the “three pillars of OCU.” Each stands for how the university prepares students in “the head, the heart, and the hands,” through knowledge gained from the classroom, time for investigating individual faith, and opportunities to serve such as mission trips and community volunteerism.

He was setting the tone for growth. This fall, OCU will add eight new associate degrees in administrative office technology, advertising and public relations, business leadership and management, communication, computer technology applications, graphic and web design, occupational safety and health, and praise and worship ministry. Barber says they are also in the process of finalizing plans for upcoming construction projects: a new entranceway on Williams Street and Highway 57 that includes new signage on a brick entrance and a new bell tower at the corner of Williams and Lucretia streets.

Barber isn’t the first leader at OCU to experience a challenging presidency. In 1885, when the General Association of General Baptists organized its charter in the State of Indiana, Oakland City College was born. Because funding lagged, the school’s doors didn’t open to students until 1891. They attended one facility with administration offices and classrooms on a donated 10-acre plot. The Christian-based college expanded in the mid-1920s when new buildings were constructed and extracurricular activities came to campus.

Then, the Great Depression halted growth and forced faculty and staff to give up their paychecks to keep the school open. In 1973, when the United States pulled out of the Vietnam War, the school fell victim again to inadequate funding. With some fundraising from the General Baptists, the college survived and earned full accreditations from the Higher Learning Commission of the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools and from the National Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education. The school gained university status and added graduate, doctoral, and more than 20 bachelor’s degrees in five schools — adult and extended learning, arts and sciences, business, education, and the Chapman School of religious studies — and developed the campus over 34 acres with multiple facilities including an administration building, an athletic center, four dorms, married student housing, a cafeteria, and nine educational halls. The school also reached a broader realm of students by creating four other campuses throughout Indiana in Evansville, Indianapolis, Rockport, and Bedford.

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